ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Compliance Toolkit

SCO puts limit on its legal payments

Stephen Shankland CNET News.com

Published: 01 Sep 2004 09:25 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

The SCO Group, committed to an expensive legal attack against Linux, said on Tuesday that it has removed some financial uncertainty from its future by working out an agreement to cap payments to its law firm.

The company has signed a letter of intent with its law firm, Boies, Schiller & Flexner, to restructure its fee agreement, chief financial officer Bert Young said in a conference call announcing financial results for SCO's third quarter of fiscal 2004, which ended 31 July. In the quarter, SCO had a net loss of $7.4m (」4.1m) on revenue of $11.2m.

Under the new fee agreement, which SCO expects to be completed in coming weeks, the company will limit its payments to $31m for the entire case, but the law firm stands to gain a larger fraction of any settlement SCO achieves. Under the new agreement, the firm's contingency payment, which is currently 20 percent of a settlement, would be between 20 and 33 percent, depending on the size of the settlement, Young said.

"You can think of it as replacing cash with contingency," Young said.

Because SCO had cash and for-sale securities worth a total of $43m as of 31 July, the new fee agreement will mean the company is assured of having at least $12m in cash regardless of the outcome of its legal case, he said.

Decatur Jones securities analyst Dion Cornett, who owns no SCO shares, applauded the move. "It was very smart of them, figuring a way to cap the legal expenses," he said in an interview. "Improving predictability and removing risk is the most important thing for shareholders," he said, though he remains "sceptical" that SCO will prevail in its legal case.

SCO's legal costs are mounting as the company pursues its cases. It spent $7.3m in the most recent quarter, nearly half of the $15m it has spent in the last five quarters, Young said. SCO expects $7.3m to be a "high-water mark," chief executive Darl McBride said.

SCO was a small and largely insignificant technology seller until it launched its attack on Linux -- an operating system it once sold alongside its two versions of Unix. The company claims in lawsuits that IBM violated its Unix contract with SCO by moving proprietary Unix technology into open-source Linux, that earlier Unix owner Novell transferred its Unix copyrights to SCO, and that AutoZone's use of Linux violates SCO's Unix copyrights.

The Linux legal action pushed SCO's stock above $22 in 2003, but the price has since dropped back down. On Tuesday, it dropped 13 cents, or 3 percent, to close at $3.80.

There were bright spots in its most recent quarter. Though revenue declined to $11.2m from $20.1m in the year-ago quarter, it increased compared to the fiscal second quarter's $10.1m.

"I was pretty pleased with the execution of the company. I was honestly shocked to see revenue up $1m sequentially," Cornett said, though he said he still expects the core Unix business to gradually erode.

Another bright spot was in August, when SCO closed a contentious transaction with BayStar Capital, which had arranged a $50m investment in 2003. BayStar had balked more than once.

In addition, the SCOsource effort, which includes the lawsuits as well as a largely unsuccessful attempt to sell Unix intellectual property licences to Linux users, fared better in the most recent quarter. It generated $678,000 in revenue, compared to $11,000 in the second quarter of fiscal 2004.

The company continues to try to sell its Unix products, and indeed its Unix division was profitable in the quarter, McBride said. More cost-cutting will take place in the current quarter to reduce expenses, SCO said.

SCO also announced its board has approved a revised shareholder rights plan designed to make a hostile takeover harder, though no such attempts are under way, McBride said.

"Where the share prices are at now, we are concerned about somebody who would be opportunistic. What's to keep IBM or somebody else from coming in and taking (SCO) out at a much lower price than the claims you have on the table?" he asked.

SCO predicted revenue of $10m to $12m for its current quarter.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly Print with Kyocera

Did you find this article useful?
57 out of 122 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

1 comment

  1. The lawyers, at least, are still laughing all the... Anonymous

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:









Related Jobs

Top tier Investment Bank seeks Equity Finance Trade Support Analyst.

Understands the lifecycle of a securities trade, and the following equity processes: Corporate Actions & Dividends, Cash Management, Stock & Cash ...

Business Analyst / Cash Management / Treasury Payments

Technical knowledge of Cash management / Treasury Payments systems would be nice to have. I am looking for a Business Analyst to work for a financial ...

Credit risk / Treasury analyst - SWIFT - Treasury system - Citidirect

The Treasury Analyst will be responsible for managing the daily payment process and providing reconciliation to support the cash management ...

Loading Video Player ....

Featured Talkback

There will be further activation issues to watch out for as Microsoft plans to offer a similar service to independent software vendors whereby they can "control" licensing through activation and other measures similar to the Software Protection Platform.

By: DefenceIT

Read full story:
Microsoft outage down to 'human error'

Sentry Posts Blog

Facebook Bans Firefox 3

Ok this is the issue. Because I dared to try and access facebook with firefox 3, and all the cookies disabled, it won't let me back on there with firefox ever again, even though... More

1 comment

GoDaddy suspends travel-getaways.com d...

I'm very pleased to say that GoDaddy has suspended the travel-getaways.com domain. I blogged in June that to my surprise I had found I was the site administrator for travel-getaways.com,... More

1 comment

Hello, I知 a PC. I知 a Handheld.

Hello, I知 a PC. I知 a Handheld. Author: Eric Everson, Founder MyMobiSafe.com I have said it before and I am sure I値l say it again, mobile devices are simply replacing computers.... More

Post a comment